Berliner Boersenzeitung - Wind powers change in England's industrial heartland

EUR -
AED 4.303675
AFN 80.848492
ALL 97.312739
AMD 449.576417
ANG 2.097205
AOA 1074.462655
ARS 1550.139863
AUD 1.789122
AWG 2.110845
AZN 2.027591
BAM 1.957104
BBD 2.367206
BDT 142.454882
BGN 1.957697
BHD 0.44173
BIF 3462.419058
BMD 1.171715
BND 1.500655
BOB 8.101465
BRL 6.317184
BSD 1.172446
BTN 102.526162
BWP 15.647088
BYN 3.876666
BYR 22965.622178
BZD 2.355089
CAD 1.613048
CDF 3386.257874
CHF 0.942264
CLF 0.028527
CLP 1119.152307
CNY 8.41198
CNH 8.40997
COP 4712.428499
CRC 592.977238
CUC 1.171715
CUP 31.050459
CVE 110.338491
CZK 24.454519
DJF 208.774599
DKK 7.462486
DOP 71.637714
DZD 152.079225
EGP 56.614972
ERN 17.575731
ETB 164.209172
FJD 2.633138
FKP 0.867461
GBP 0.863619
GEL 3.15771
GGP 0.867461
GHS 12.457404
GIP 0.867461
GMD 84.949632
GNF 10166.771545
GTQ 8.992721
GYD 245.284998
HKD 9.197878
HNL 30.735471
HRK 7.533657
HTG 153.467632
HUF 395.343224
IDR 18862.157615
ILS 3.960158
IMP 0.867461
INR 102.468564
IQD 1535.922997
IRR 49358.512335
ISK 143.195359
JEP 0.867461
JMD 187.895147
JOD 0.830768
JPY 172.379846
KES 151.479674
KGS 102.349165
KHR 4695.20737
KMF 493.879832
KPW 1054.470683
KRW 1614.787767
KWD 0.357877
KYD 0.97703
KZT 630.935617
LAK 25382.122304
LBP 104960.00405
LKR 352.754951
LRD 235.064527
LSL 20.526772
LTL 3.459771
LVL 0.70876
LYD 6.370243
MAD 10.561234
MDL 19.573619
MGA 5170.487914
MKD 61.579175
MMK 2459.706324
MNT 4213.945705
MOP 9.479428
MRU 46.792166
MUR 53.230828
MVR 18.044918
MWK 2033.045428
MXN 21.818571
MYR 4.92999
MZN 74.942741
NAD 20.526772
NGN 1796.67353
NIO 43.148739
NOK 11.947244
NPR 164.041659
NZD 1.959538
OMR 0.450554
PAB 1.172391
PEN 4.132252
PGK 4.949296
PHP 66.335551
PKR 332.72421
PLN 4.25342
PYG 8781.849122
QAR 4.275548
RON 5.060051
RSD 117.173915
RUB 93.153351
RWF 1696.493747
SAR 4.396763
SBD 9.643912
SCR 16.573885
SDG 703.620657
SEK 11.175904
SGD 1.499591
SHP 0.920784
SLE 27.187579
SLL 24570.286982
SOS 670.057727
SRD 43.843833
STD 24252.143453
STN 24.515596
SVC 10.258833
SYP 15234.585294
SZL 20.521844
THB 37.795434
TJS 10.932508
TMT 4.112721
TND 3.447396
TOP 2.744277
TRY 47.751154
TTD 7.962065
TWD 35.060658
TZS 3052.318817
UAH 48.679423
UGX 4171.653906
USD 1.171715
UYU 46.951272
UZS 14666.768754
VES 155.54821
VND 30804.398319
VUV 140.078676
WST 3.114567
XAF 656.405401
XAG 0.030442
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.166619
XCG 2.113025
XDR 0.82294
XOF 656.394189
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.533921
ZAR 20.509883
ZMK 10546.845765
ZMW 26.99521
ZWL 377.291886
  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    14.7

    -0.68%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.08

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.15

    +0.3%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BCC

    2.3500

    86.61

    +2.71%

  • SCS

    0.3750

    16.565

    +2.26%

  • BCE

    0.4700

    24.97

    +1.88%

  • NGG

    0.1280

    70.408

    +0.18%

  • RIO

    0.3250

    63.425

    +0.51%

  • VOD

    0.1150

    11.655

    +0.99%

  • RELX

    -0.1050

    47.725

    -0.22%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    23.675

    +0.49%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    39.16

    +2.4%

  • JRI

    0.0250

    13.405

    +0.19%

  • BTI

    -0.9150

    57.005

    -1.61%

  • AZN

    2.2350

    77.575

    +2.88%

  • BP

    0.0050

    34.075

    +0.01%

Wind powers change in England's industrial heartland
Wind powers change in England's industrial heartland

Wind powers change in England's industrial heartland

On the banks of the River Humber in northern England, the winds of change are blowing through Hull, where factory workers busily craft turbine blades in a green revolution.

Text size:

Hull, known for a once-thriving fishing industry, the poet Philip Larkin, rugby league, and the city's eponymous football club recently bought by Turkish TV personality Acun Ilicali, is home to Britain's biggest wind turbine blade plant.

That has placed Hull at the centre of the UK government's long-term plan to slash carbon emissions, tackle climate change and cut rocketing household energy bills.

German-Spanish giant Siemens Gamesa is rapidly expanding its facility to meet booming demand and keep the country's much-trumpeted 2050 net-zero target on track.

The need for cheaper sources of energy became increasingly urgent this week, as the government scrambled to head off a cost of living crisis, faced with runaway electricity and gas costs that are fuelling decades-high inflation.

Britain unveiled financial support for households after the UK energy regulator lifted prices to reflect the spiking natural gas market.

- 'Cheaper and cleaner' -

"We are doing our bit to tidy the world up and get cheaper and cleaner energy for everybody," blade painter Carl Jackson, 56, told AFP from the factory floor.

"I think wind power is a big part of the future. It's been a massive boost to jobs and the economy in Hull," added Jackson, who joined when Siemens Gamesa opened six years ago.

The hub has since manufactured 1,500 hand-made turbine blades and now employs more than 1,000 people.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, host of last November's UN climate change summit in Glasgow, has vowed to "level up" economic opportunity in places like Hull, which voted overwhelmingly for Brexit.

Siemens Gamesa built the £310-million plant jointly with Associated British Ports in 2016, and it is now undergoing a major extension to build bigger blades.

The Hull factory manufactures about 300 turbine blades per year, with each measuring 81 metres in length -- about the same as the wingspan of an Airbus A380 aircraft.

A wind turbine, comprising three such blades, can power an average house for 24 hours with one single rotation.

New, even longer 100-metre blades will provide enough power for up to two days.

- 'Driving down energy costs' -

In the cavernous Hull factory, staff assemble balsa wood, fibreglass and resin into vast blade moulds to start a journey that will eventually harness the ferocious winds of the North Sea.

That enables Britain to cut carbon emissions while curbing its dependency on imported energy and lowering prices in the long term, said plant director Andy Sykes.

"Over the course of last year, 25 percent of the UK's (electricity) was delivered from wind power," said Sykes.

"That will only continue to grow and help drive down the cost of energy by reducing the need for the import of energy."

The group will open another factory in Le Havre, northern France, this year in a push for cleaner energy across Europe, where wind generated an average 16 percent of electricity according to 2020 industry data.

Scotland recently awarded a string of vast offshore wind projects after Johnson vowed to make Britain the "Saudi Arabia of wind".

Hull is also expanding into the broader renewable sector, with plans for biofuels, green hydrogen, and carbon capture, as well as solar and tidal power generation under the city's "Green Port" initiative.

The local authority is eager to slash carbon output from the Humber estuary region, which accounts for 40 percent of Britain's industrial emissions -- particularly from the cement, gas, oil, petrochemicals and steel sectors.

"You really have to decarbonise the Humber area for the UK to be really able to address significant parts of its net zero challenge," Hull City Council climate officer Martin Budd told AFP.

"And this Siemens offshore wind plant provides a key activator to achieve that."

The Humber estuary's high seabed makes it ideal for offshore turbines.

At the same time, the estuary expels an estimated 12.3 million tonnes of carbon per year.

- Ensuring survival -

Budd said tackling climate change was vital to saving low-lying Hull from flooding.

"We are the second most vulnerable UK city after London to flooding. So the survival of the city depends on tackling climate change," he added.

"It's integral that we tackle climate change and that as a city we take those steps by supporting manufacturing in industries that are going to tackle climate change."

The UK wants offshore wind farms to provide one-third of the country's electricity by 2030.

Climate change specialist Nick Cowern, an emeritus professor at Newcastle University, cautioned that Britain also needed to develop chemical storage capability.

"It's realistic to put wind power at the centre of the UK's low carbon electricity generation approach, which is a major part of the effort towards net zero," he told AFP.

He added that while wind and solar were safe long-term bets, gas still had a significant role to play.

"Until we have the ability to store electricity as hydrogen -- or alternatives like ammonia -- and be better grid-connected to our neighbours in continental Europe and the Nordic countries, gas will still be needed during periods of low wind speeds and low solar generation."

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)